wlambdan
wlambdan is an ancient Greek word meaning "through a lambdas" which is used to describe a musical and mathematical technique for rearranging musical phrases or intervals by placing them between the two lambda symbols of the Macedonian and southern Greek forms of the Greek letter lambda. This technique was used by a number of composers, including those in the ancient Greek style and those of the Baroque style. In the Baroque era, the mode, a set of interrelated scales and chord progressions used in Western traditional music, was often written in a puzzle like a game with only seven into tunes that cycle and by using the w lambda between tune parts turned into seven sections of block chords that would or did provide a resonance helping the listener with identification of the tonal harmony being suggest or employed by the artist composer.
This practice can sometimes make it difficult to make sense of the tune because the changes in